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siete SPASONABLE STGGESTICGNS—HOW MUCH TO EaT— An Ol Story in a New Way. THE CARS OF THE EYES—HOW TO AVOID sUN- pares STROKE—LADIES WORK, BTC., ETC. Persis came hopping in like a bird. KsnoseNe For Wants.—It is said that com-| “Dear, dear!” sald she. presently, peering out mon Kerosene placed on warts will remove | from a cloud of silks and laces, “what shall I them in a couple of weeks. It should be applied | do for a dressmaker?” twice a day, and if the surface of the wart Is! “Why, where is Rhoda Tracy?” bard and it shonid be scratched to promote . ‘he absorption of the oil. No scar is left after | _ “Gone to fill a vacancy, mamma. In other ‘MUSICAL AXD DRAMATIC. ‘Deacon Sliderback’s: ‘With Whtshey | The king is rapidly crowing mad. He cute of fe come SEAFON—aMeSEMENTS DAR 5 >a the noses of those who take snuff, and the tips of “ : om = See Deacon sitderback has » plons aversion to | SIrr. nee Aiouia. Insatating hin, is tebaceo- PP gees gu yeh gw setae Arden cards, nich Re looks upon ee {ree pases t0 | ox dropped out. Ras Aloula etrack him with | Seaschciwedy wins Corts hae Reerly ited the whatever place may be a pre ma his sword, and his people finished him. The king | _ Berkely E. Peescly has rewritten Bartley faiene: Meieeens factory, ‘aa is hated more than Theodore was. Cruel to & | Campbell's Pate, and Eatlian Cleves Clark play seni Sue Gee sang | GexTee, he does not, however, take life. He | play it under the title of A Dangerous bry cuts off the feet and hands of people who offend — Another Sait Lake Gity story is to be aos dave. words, she has married a widower.” good excuse for Gown town. | iim. He puts out their eyes by pouring hot tal- = Mrs. Talbot laughed. Important matters connected with the charch | iow into their ear. Several came to me to te!l temo “Well, ihe a dear; you can havée Mrs. often compel him to stay out late In consalta- | me this. I remonstrated with the king against ee ee NG, he Se Co ae RE? Se See 3 tion with the other deacons, and upon these oc- | his edict forcing men to become Christians from ture, get rough, and sometimes rusty; and it is “3 ros Mussulman. He said they wished it. I also “Oh, but Rhoda is better. Only think of her casions the spiritaal condition bonignted strated about the tobacco edict, but it Ret well to keep them hot all the time, for a s rf back f Dea- | Teme nul od many reasons—they are liable to get | leaving me and becoming somebody's second heathen is discussed in the room of was of no use. No one can travel without Enceked off and broken, andatter awiile ao Set | wife! For my part I woukin’t thank any man gon Magrader’s grocery. James Bowers, & | the king's order, if he is a foreigner. You catt Wallack’s new theater in New ¥. Fetain the heat as weil, and they are in the way. | for his affections warmed.over. worldly young man; but a very entertaining and | bay nothing without the king's order; no one | — new fer in New York will H Fou cecasionally rub the smooth surfaces | «sty itttie Persis, don’t fret. No man will ever le 00) lvely companion, takespartin these discussions | Will shelter you without, ils order,—in fact, | hardly. be ready = cetera Ravnttys With a bit o€ beeswax, and then rubonapieceof > = no more complete despotism could exist. | new icago theater is progressing rapidly. loth, they will always keep bright and smooth, | Offer you his affections, either freshed or warmed been! gace ina while. Mr. Bowers is.a discreet young | Cunot last; for the king will go on from one | has avery Imposing front. If they do ever happen to get wet, and so rust,lay | Over, you may depend on that.” vine miadness to another. Orders were given that 00 | __ iss Fanny Addison, a well-known English alittle fine salt upon a smooth board, and rab “Then he needn't; and I shan't have to refuse James read in the paper that an Elmira man | one was to approach me; nor was I to speak | actress, is in New York and It is said to be probe them over it quickly while hot. him,” retorted Persis, gaily, as she dipped, had devised a game of whiskey poker to be | to an, The officer who conducied me to | alle that she and ber ester. Carlotta Addison, Coup Tea.—As usually made, colé tea isan un- | swallow like, this way and that, laying away the Diag ee aay eed a accent naan tO? Seat ccay Sothink inane Benton ‘Wholescme drink. The tea is made in the tea- | sinks, pen | thors” cards; so he purchased a pack and took aay ties | — Sam’? of Posen is still running at Haverley’s h i y th t. and durst not ask why they were chained. The Sam’l of is stil running at Raverley Pot, as usaal. and then cofled therein, and per-| But there was a painful flush on her young | taitered ed oul a herrieg oon ee ee Sai so hat pe cipapen females tae and | them along to the nextconference on the prop- | King isa aman’ of Yoome 45 yeara, a sour, il | Fourteenth Btrest Theater, New York. It will haps allowed to stand in the tea-pot for many | cheeks, and a moment after she ewept gracefully | beamed down upon him so graciously that he | she ed suddenly away, but not before she | #gation ofthe faith among the Esquimaux, beld favored looking being. He never looks you in | probably be kept on the stage for a month frank; by this process the | ont of the room. Unless you looked twice you | Walked home on a bed of roses, and never really | had been observed. in Deacon Magruder’s back room, on Baturday | the face. but when you look away he glares at | [Snoer and then the theater will be closed for Se we enc cc | would waver ave divinad ta escke thie eae came to his senses till Mrs. Blake dropped into Miss Persts!” cried an eager voice, | evening. Deacon Sliderback and Deacon Ma- SS tgoks | repairs. - rn the usual | liar sldeways motion. The gold-mounted ute friend, Perse Tale sa ner charming new | and Bphralm Zelle rushed up the stairs with both | grader held an argument about the amount of | SW8YS Sand hating all, I can tinagine | — The Twelve Jolly Bachelors is the title of a 8 for green tea, | which peeped in and out of the folds of her dress | Now Mra” lane oa eg De married. | hands ext not thought of seeing a friend from | ving grace an Esquimaux eould absorb; which | no more unhappy man.’ Avaricions above | new comle opera to be produced in Boston by and fifteen minntes | was like a wand of enchantment, and, as was | (Think what a ploblan he must hove been to home, and when he came forward and greeted | 48 interrupted by James Bowers making some | all his people, who do not lack this | John A. Stevens. Dour it off into &| sia of Mlle. Salle, ‘1 saa have a relative who took in sewing!) She was | her with such unusual warmth of manner, a re- | “ppant remark abont bear's and suz- | quality, his ldea of a free port is that fleets of | —JohmT. Raymond closed his season at Den= toe eata” t MOF SLED Were semth- | Tt seustblo womans WEG ciinited MICLIS | VAIN DE Soclt Ramee a cer tae oan | gesting a gamo of amor. ‘the two deans 2 ver last night. His vacation extends to Sep- to her Sen. banasen, and hat almost pei calmness gave way, and she sobbed like a child. | T¢#dily assented, and, after playing a while, tember 5, when he ‘opens in Boston. When Persis was a baby her perfect beauty | away her left forefinger downto the bone, What | - “‘Dear Persia, if T pould omy do anything for | James voted the game dull sepferiar get ou | —it is mow said that Neumann isto give the had well-nigh wrought her ruin. The nurse, | she said was usually the simple truth, and you | you,” said Ephraim, hanging over her tenderly, | }deas about making it more interesting. He brother, my mother, etc. How are you? { 5 58 {- me Lf & i Ee iii z i z ments.” i ; then place it in the Cans oF THE Eves. —It is well settled that knew the two deacons were wholly ignorant of * Youk = Wagner Trilogy in London at Her Majesty's, and ‘d - i ly ignor You know I have’ seea many peoples, ogy ; Proudofher superb little figure and graceful | wight a ee ne nes HBMUNE 10 WORE | Ae canal came ofdrae anne explained to | but I never met with a more fierce, savage set | that Mapleson expects to induce Wagner himself eles and the arity of their blood supply. | Poses, was accustomed. with criminal reckless-| ™! mauisTalbee aan jou say?” asked he, pick-| He never doubted she was weeping at thought | them the relative value of pairs, two pairs, and | than tnese. The peasantry are good enouzh. | to come over. If it were not that the author of coetae of a is : s y byob aiden ness, to pereh her on a broad mante! and show ing a eurrant out of a with the coolest de-| of the outrageous suffering before her, and he wet me apne Tye aes on rgd The king says he can beat united Europe, except | the Fiying Lnitchman hates the sea, perhaps Hay- oe upon aulects within the range of vision. | her off to visitors. In this way the little crea-| ltemace could have fought his dastardly rival with a good +O a agrees: Play for mak Russia. All the great men_do not want a war | erly might get him over here. Bee he re eee ene, SE HOU | sre kndin Mall whlch nae Gao tab shorter than | _ ‘Yes, to Stanley Warner; the affair is cut and | will. He did not tell her that he had come to | S#me interesting. pith Egypt; and the king fears it when sober, |" —yinnie Hauck has returned to Maploson's the other, and lamed her for life. Persis had | dled.” replied the not over el Aunt Blake, | Boston for her sake, just to learn how it fared | , James dealt the hands, and explained that the | for he drinks to excess at night. He talke like tag ditterent five cards turned down on the table constituted | the Oid Test. e strictest | troupe, and bas been singing “Carmen” at Her suffered very little physical pain, but the mortt- ibe or ay oie aril Pie en we That Dedlont ae mele tae Ppa ap the “widow” hand and that, the man hol sect of the rrpecrtaa A! odin at | Majesty's, Campanini having also returned to fication had been intense; it had given a morbid | Zelie sat late at Lis that it, Mid scrib- | Was now on his way to the surgeon's on a fool's | the age had the privilege of exchanging his dawn he is up reading the Psalms. He never | sing “DonJose.” The “Michaela” is—of all per- ves, if one may use an expression, is in every | coloring to an otherwise rose colored lire, bled @ black “Ichabod” on every blank bit of | errand; to beg him to have pity and stay his knife. | fF the “widow,” or knocking and pasting the | would miss a prayer-meeting, and would | sons in the world—Swift, who now figures as Simeae fe cee ae nee ettedem: | <<Ng sean will ever offee you kin fectione, (pape ok lead. le wee ait eed signhe | “If there were ouly soinething I’ cou'd do for Cetera ee have a Bible as big as a portmanteau, if he were | ** Malle. Dotti.” The next novelty promised is servalien wail Giicieacy. . = Sao a ou that, © repeated she, bury- are gure of = hidden round. His own hd Mr. Zelie in an agony, not daring | (6 trend of the ot dows and fkthaviom Seteos: sera er he ee spewed wetie 34 Il Rennegato, a a pp mee pe in} @ sofa-pi . “Mamma mot observed no el in ex more explicity, for he was su; 4 me ped S| yards palace, — a Ly Baron Orezy. composer Tus Use oF Lewoxs.—T do not think there is | and it is true; I know i all belore> Sevag | the tall eee rea Be oe aks nen Ee ant | Cone teeth ree ee eee Hane bi reputation by picking upthe “widow.” | is furious at my opeaing his letter to the khe-| the fret performance, and Blac Duch is to ang an hundredth part of lemon-juice used generally | Warner means nothing by his tender words and | need of camomile tea. “You can’thelp me, you can’t help me,” said | ! sisi esprit n Siidertock al dive. I know, and indeed kuew, that I was | the soprano role. as its valuable qualities would seem to com- | tender glances. He is as proud as Lucifer, and | _ Even Persis_ herself, “walking on thrones,” | poor Persis, stifling the sudden wish to confide pean pees the “aeaeode pe cmeten, pee te rovobing| gk) his power; but I | —Manager Mendum, of the Arch, Philadel- [know of nothing better as a stom-| Would never abide the mortification of a lame | never once suspected ’ she was tramping over’ | in him. fs hare moment their old friendship ow the verse, rts, debted to their household needlework for the maintenance of a hicher standard of vision than that of their husbands. Idleness of the , are in | 45 : 2 3 z | Snapped up by Bowers to pair with “The House 5 ey vers of water, | Pbia, has closed a contract with Anna Dickinson, achic corrective as well as a stzengthener ofthe | He. It does seem cruel! But I will not eat | heart. The happy young creature saw in life in focligg ont aurays the WAS car | Or Reven Gables.” They: drew around. teres, | ie reg eerie big ge Nadler POPPE ani sessing s oy eS very ee ee Ne at eae ae eee | fpringing tp and ‘inahtng’ ot th Tinshed | ber erutehs it ier Ae teste childish, Zriefs “tor thine aks | When Deacon Sliderbaek knocked, and they all hedive, knew the king well. He sald to ine: | probable, Judging from the past, xhe will appear for rheumatism, and I no doubt is also | 1¥ - ashing off the unsi Dee At might now be supposed to grow Si ,, | Stoodtheir hands and showed down. Dea s 1 i . 3.” He | next fall. 8 urelian wnd a ( Soyo aa | tears. “And now for the party, and a gay new | less; but, on the contrary, it rather increased. ‘5 sympathetic Ephraim, But no, # ; + | “Never go hear him; it is perfectty useless.” He | next fall. She ix to play in A jan and a Crown Sranae fata Times Teeanbe | Jess! Til eend for Sirs. Blake forthwitir “Oh, mother,” she sighed one day, “Stanley oto tell him what ‘she was | Hagrud Sliderbuck exhibited two pate, ooo fps one legitimate son, Ras Arya Salam, and one | of gg ge ep eget he sone co tocoming aces |Betwtoner. haddroppet her unica Me | mean"? eet have—ths iment] useing now rade vine Sk uy wat | ane ant Janos tad Taree tarneres, ace | Minas wo au of eon re wih | care Wy Sheridan to appar her. Acord Ht isnot tnpleasant ene soon becoming aceus her weidower, had dropped her mantle Car ae ee pe ee Wes ae Dencon siiderback a point for the lowest hand. | ig dead. ‘iis nanse was baows Bead tie ieee | treet ne country. One of the wets of Me. Crpantlaler dapat aday wollonc oes ira est | fairy straight from theland of elves. How mar- | with the set look about the lips she alwayswore | home this morning. Something has ocewsed. deacons had four pobits and James uy teor te | 2u4 the people thought that our government | Mendum's vist to ~ pm elaabca agai cure I have ever used. It will relieve it in from | Yelous a dress she fashioned out of -‘such stuff | when Stanley's name was mentioned. - “Does I cannot tell you what—which inakes me un- being agreed that the man getting ae fats | Would se: in here. | *Ppearance there next spring. : ine as dreams are made of,” and how Persis floated | he? Then I suppose he is thankful for that one | happy; but it is all for the best Ephraim, and | srst'wenld be Rank ae oe ‘drinks. F ipsa Faye aes | —Mdile. Rhea, whom H. J. Sargent is going fa villat a time, 1| CM in it like a vision of beauty! As fair and | defect. Not being anywhere near an angel | one of these days I shall see it $0.” Deacon Sliderback’s deal, and he passed the The Real lego. | to bring over here next fall to play Modjeska’s know of people who take it three times a day | sweet, sald Celin v arner, as a “wounded dove." Mmeoif, he can’t wish for perfection in cee Me Ae elas ejaculated Mr. Zale rae pack to James, who cut the “Stones of Venice” DY RICHARD GRANT WHITE. ‘roles in English, is a very bright and well-cda- oe 7 » of s in | sis caugh: words, and the le morbi s mamma, he knows I am very human, e ss secret ‘xult- ia ne y giance at tt as. z0 was a young 3 7 s-ciel ms “a he! aan aeerentive a —— | spotin ber heart achee cirane E ib is only’ hin way ef talkin sey Per- | ant that she was going home, and the object of | {F the bottom card, taking a sly glance at it as | Tazo was a young man, only twenty-eight cated French actress, who has made seme repu- No sugar.—Germantown |“ N0, Mr. Warner,” said she Proudly, as he | sis, with one of her quick blushes. ‘I should | the Journey had not been accomplished. a aa a e ce. “I preforto sit inthis win- | be glad for his sake to walk like other people.| The days and weeks which followed were | while James picked up the “wnlow? and can | de is so pleasant to watch tie crowd in mo- | Do you know there is a way—a terrible way—I | dreary ones for Persis. She could far better | - Lh pe ow a tarew than anything ei lie did so. The deacon tossed around the cards, years old,—the youngest of all the men who j and Deacon Magruder stood pat and knocke@ | tation at St. Petersburg, but her recent attempt figure in the tragedy, excepting, possibly, Rod- | to play in English in London was not a success. igo. Re says of himself that he has looked | She essayed Much Ado About Nothing for one ae Ke | down his hand, one of rds being “Seven | “7° y afternoon only and it was generally ald that she hanily dare to tell you” have borne the surgeon’s knife than the luke- | €° . the cards being ha ard " ssi afternoon only and it was generally “ more orless | «Pardon me,” replied Mr. Warner, biting his | ““A'terrible way to what ?” warm regrets of Stanley, who felt that gallantry | Limps of Architecture,” which Deacon Siider- | upow the world for four times seven years. | micht have made apretty good: “Beatrice” If be what isthe | moust and moving away with ‘a graceful | ‘To walk,” zasped Persis, the color dying out | demanded him to pursue her for acertainlenath | back agerly picked up. Brave, ant zin with a very | flourish. “I was thoughtless to make the re- | entirely, and her white lips trembling as she | of time with protestations of his undiminished zood soldier, he was also of that | she had known the language. Possibly she may per amount fora : den Wat have you got?” said Deacon Magra- | order of ability which lifts aanan speedily above | learn to speak English before November. oF 3 . rn ioe ler to Mr. Bow his fellows. His manners and his guise were of | —Mrs. Burnett, of Washington, assisted ¥ cht breaktast 2 such as quest. spoke. “ Amputation—as far as the ankle. | regard. Two gi “ ” “Gy oo iid end his guise ‘were of 2 Y y : aaa ote the number | And he never dreamed that his words hurt. _| Then when the time comes, gcorke ot eek: | PENG» reptied Persia Army, and feeling more | jy iy Sor mall airs, “Thackeray” and “George | » gashing mullitary sort; and bils manner had a | Mr. Gillette, is converting two of her stones awant of | , “He forgets sometimes that Iam a ‘wounded | know, mamma, a cork foot walks beautifully.” | and more that she was in the right, “I will not | Elliott,’ rey f D be rs y crs ” corresponding bluntness, tempered at times | into a play, hich will probably be presented at aches eee S light breakfast, say one | Gorey © Migled Versis from the window-seat; | |“\Persis Talbot! How could you conceive | make it possible foryou torepentand beashamed | dennis,” “Vanity Fatr,” “Daniel Deronda,” and Ey fait te SaeMata” Stearman [eeemtee ores mat tems eee il, acup of coffee and avery small piece of | “but sooner or later he always comes to his | such a dreadful idea ?” of me.’ ““T've got a Hugo straight,” remarked Deacon | p, 2 . Madison Square Theater, New York. meat, three hours or less will be found the limit. | SNses. holt Lheard of er a He tea ethan bom and with: | wagruder, laying down “Lea Miserables,” “7 | 02 tHe very tact which prompted the | Madison Strakosdh will open his next opers is not offered as a rule, but as a suggestion; There was one man who did not forget, and | I have seen her—. drew, a little relieved, perhaps, to find his per- Hiocamo ‘Quit-Rit” Ninety-three.” “Toilers of Uluntuess. For that, although not exactly as- % ® ao a pen oe for it makes a vast difference what you do dur- | that was Ephraim Zelie. But, then, Persia did E li ; | charming erentura: but sre had wn Certainly & | the Sea,” and. “Napoleon the Little,” “and I | sumed, was consciously adopted. Nevertheloas, *C880n here as usual and then go to New Or- ins those three hours. A given amount of food | HOt care very much what Ephraim remembered | mamma, all the patent. contrivances for the feet | charming creature, but he had all along been guess tliat’s the boss hand out.” he had little malice in his composition; and un- | !€ane, where he expects to open in December Will ge further in manual labor than in mental | OF what he forgot. He was a worthy young | do nogood. ‘I must always swing this cruel, de- | conscious that his’ feelings had betrayed him | £¥e Hold on,” chipped in Deacon Sliderback, “I | less for som he would rather serve | 24 to remain tea weeks, vice De Beaupl Inbor. as brain work is more exhausting than | ™4M, and she sald in her girlish intolerance, “dif | testible cratch unlese—" Pepe ah cipeemncat. A tame wife wouMt be |. test that Vouleay Ws « stmaigut dont ea eg eae pt rrceat | Oke £0 pieces. . He says that Gerster is eng: hand work. The uext time try alittie more, | there’s one thing stupider than another it is eae tie peer you see Abby Harlow? Who feb aie oe eee — side you" zi y , feed to aa, ier pagans es coe fo him. ie cnenee cd a deca eee ‘will | Your worthy young man! He taught school, | introduced you?” ad the good sense to perceive. He mai to . ked by all, as regarded not only a§ &| The Honlon-Lees open at the Park, N.¥., in Foam tojudge pretty cloncly what youresuirete | oudied law, aad I in nat ware bar Ee sorted | ne a et cok, mamma, when I went | six months afterward a fair girl with “little feet | pj ‘wats what I callit. What have you) man of great ability in his profession and of September, in their wonderful Journey in Sicitee G@rry on your work till the hour of the next | ow” @ lange farm at the same time: but when you | With Stanley to the Islands.” se acto, "ich could trip faultlessly through | Swen rye got a Ruskin flush,” remarkea | S2tcity in affairs, but as a warm-hearted; | September, MaaE Wacene Seana ost just what you need fo draw him out ina general conversation | _ Mrs. Talbot's lips shut-together with a spring | a quadrille. Deacon Sliderback. exuitingly, showing down | ;.¥/0le-souled” man,and the very prince of cood Ths Soashan asian ly agree that Rever. on any consideration, take more. Never | it was like drawing a sound tooth. He was the | lock. What she thought of her son-in-law elect |__‘“That was the way he loved me,” said Persia, | (stogern Painters” “Deucalion,” “Crown of | UOWs. Being all this, and being genial and | — The A 8 generally az mind how nive the steak, how tempting-any food | Most industrious of men, and the Kindest of sons | it had always been easy to guess by what ahe | bitterly; and she caressed the worn gold at the | «MO Olives,” “Seven Lamps of’ Architecture | SSmPathetic, he was eminently popular. He |Rubenstein’s 11 Dermonio, which has been pro~ may be, shat right down on the whole eating | to 4 widowed mother; but, then. his eyes were | did not say. Persis looked at her i uiringly, | top of her crutch as if that enchanted wand had | NVii “Stones of Venice.” ~ | Was, moreover, a heartiess, seliish, cold-blooded, | duced at Covent Garden under the composer's paciiicaas thes io ve had efiough. Tyo | $2-sreen, under rugged clitts of eyebrows: his | and as their eyes met a cold glitter of determix. | saved her from a broken heart, No you don't,” ‘said Deacon Magruder; | wuprincinled and utterly unscrupulous | own direetion, is strangely destitute of dramatic Mitle can be rey ; ing a light Iunch be- | hands were horny, and all his angles as acute as | ation rose in both pair of orbs. Gentle Persis| Time brought back the lost roses to her cheek, “that’s no better hand than my Hugo straight.” | eundrel. character, Though written within the past few fore the next Too much cannot. be re- | lawyer's wits. had Geel, in her composition as well as her | and more than one lover came to sue; but “she | “that's ne better hand 1! ponded Siiderback, | y,lt %2® because he was this manner of man | Scare iis more antifelal med Gwent onal t ired, and you must pay for the indiscretion, | , Seeing Miss Persis alone in the window seat | mother, the two natures met sometimes and | did not care for love,” she ead, getting excited: “I claim 4 fusbeand that beats | {iat he was able to work tijat woful rain in |} operas of a generation or two back, aud t all this tlere must be plain common sense. ‘eart Geeaiet up “a at eee ree aga ee et ae ek Gunes ae bein me ee sere any straight in the deck. Any fool knows that.” ~— os tee Fei cot ecsenig pe | only part of the music that seems to meet wit, imitate the A we of | e @ loud o| ion to suc! iS , Mamma,” said the young girl, a few ; pri eday to see face ligl rf ee | Sliderbeck xtremity, however, | seem De not imitate the invalid who ke ta air « “| posi weckeuie, (De oe ee gubrait | up os Ephraim Zelle bowesl 1s ponuner Dontt call me a fool, Deacon Sliderback. - gel approval is that which has no need to be o : hot plan, and did not at frst desire. In fact, he | STiatie' tne ballet and sen ase. ‘drinking rad 3 ated. 3 ‘stup_.|.. “How do you do, Miss Persia?” sai | to tle operation I spoke of.” ‘* Ephraim is a rising young man; he will make | E¥¢ Played poker as mueh as you have, and T| jaa‘ no inclination todo harm to any one: he preteecrpiee pred rengae pagan dine rary] read. Eat and be satistied, and then stop.— | ,,, “Mow do you do, Miss Persie? shes Fes one | (Oe Cee enoke sweet, but there was | his mark in the world,” saldshe slyly; “but look, Bay your handle only @: sagt would not have gone out of his way to trend gi rd a a = penance ogi c : 2 rowly escaped becoming expressive. no wavering in it. Persis, how awkward he is.” ald ht, then; mine’s a flush, and it beats | UP? 8 Worm, if it had kept out of his way, and | — Kate Claxton w we an entirely new To Avor Stx-s ise in excessively |" «Very well, Ephraim; and how are you?” re-| “Not with my consent, my daughter.” « Yes, mamma,” was the quick reply: “‘butfor | youre teeta ne anne 82 fia Mater Pets | been no barrier to his success im life. company next season, hot weather shou moderate; the | plied she, rousing from a sad reverie. She al-|_ “Iam so sorry, mamma; but you will think | my part Iam tired of elegance; I consider awk- | SOUS, Deranee it ia Dat, a A Sredson It is needless to say thet no such Iago has heen'| ~— Edwin Bootl’s engagement in Bootl’s Thee elothing n awd loose, and an abun- | ways calls him “Ephraim,” because she had | better of it. Papa has consented He is going | Wardness so refreshing.” ehat 0 Say anything, Deacon Ma- | seen upon the stage for the last hundred dance of ould be 2 : : : : “a ” . about that card yon dropped under the ‘ i . meg <. Work-| known him froma boy. Hehad lived with me, and—and—Mr. Warner too. ‘Ah ha! Blows the wind in that quarter?” | studer, abo ears; there is no memory or record of him. The | drunk. W - ry le lived a year at y e: e! Grane pi as | ber tether cad worked nn his board while | - There'was no help for it. Persis had set her | thought mamina, and went on demurely with io eich ating to get pan er hepicnerre ceeiecrese le working or | attending the academy. How Ephraim at | feet in the “terrible way,” and Mrs. Talbot, | her knitting, glasses of cider in fis own atin oon tines alm are in danger of | this moment envied — other youths their | with a mother’s heart, could do no less than Persis and Mr. Zelie had grown to be fast was shown np, I won't menticn it outside this 1 saw it in my boyhood just as this a later. — ak immediately drink |Monehalance | of manner! Here was he | follow. The world knew nothing of the object | friends again; but it was a long time. before time, thought if you give in beaten-> {ies Staggering off the stage; and nothing eq — Xat Goodwin is reported to have made e piously to afford matter for | Standing beside the very woman he | ofthe journey. But Ephraim Zelie learned it | Persis understood the nature of their friendship “Do pain gfe igh nate of cheating, Dea- to it have I ever seen except Rachel's per- | genuine hit Cinderella ut School, in the Bos ration, and also keep the skin | Wished most to please, but he was tongue-tied. | from his Aunt Blake, who, unless she shut her | or came to any knowledge of the deep love con Sliderback?” said Magrader, in a tone of | @™™ances. But it was the simple, strong rep- | ton Museum. t with ws Impending sun- | She sat there seif-possesse@ and beautiful. scan- | €ars, could not help ‘hearing the warm diseus-| which lay concealed beneath Epbraim’s rough : 0 eae : - ater will bezin on the 3d of October. fags was un adeairuble rat —W. F. Sheridan opened in San Pranciseo ance, almost wonderful in its-force and ke _ | this week. Charlotte Thompeon will join him men and soldi goonas they c resentation of a hardened, crafty villain, a mon- oe . : suppressed emotion. “ - ¥ 2 oke may often be warded offby these g him from head to foot, he thought, She | sions between mother and daughter which were | exterior, like a pure fountain underground. | S¥ppressed. ster of hate and of cruelty. The climax of the " S HAIR. enmner Chetoes tac rhe of pe wa | was not hanghty in the least, but she’ mit | ineautlously carried on in her Presence. Woman- | She had grown a little distrustful. “Men were | 7 ar anit bie acta ee OF | Shole performance was in the Parthian. look a. ae tion, the pupils pt to be contracted, and | have placed him at his ease, and she did not plike, Mrs. Blake took sides with that “cold. | all alike,” she said. religion should———” Which lago, ashe was borne off wounded and | The Plan Adopted by “M. Quad” with Distime there is great frequency ef micturition. When | care to do it. If she had once turned the con- | blooded Warner,” who “hadn’t any more fee But somehow when Ephraim spoke she lis- in bonds, gave Othelleo—a Gorgon stare, in there is marked exhaustion. with a weak pulse, | Yersation to “old times,” and the well-remem- | ing than a billet of reck maple.” She went | tined and rejoiced. She believed in him, and Oh, you dry up, you old fraud!” yelled Ma- i a yel which hate seemed both petrified and petrify- Buished Success, i 7 der, “Didn't I'sce you deal the “Stones of aniiek 5 : + appticatic bered incidents of that too happy year, Ephraim | to her nephew with the story because she knew | 0 at last the “worthy young man” was re- | &™™ oa Br hspied bs ing. It was frightful. Edwin Booth's concep- | Detroit Pree Press. Should sdmuister stimulants, “The fee ace er would have beeu hime ins peoeee er | he head friendly interest in Persia, warded for his years of hopeless constancy. | Lente’ to yourself offthe bottom of the pack, | tion of the character, although not so clear add |. There is no nee in fooling around about it. water, however. both externally and internally, | he ever forget the afternoon on the “basin,” and| “But if you'd never set eyes on the sweet | _ “It took a bitter experience to teach me the | “"{) You're a liar! s strong, is finer, more delicate, aad more com- | When a boy's hair has become long and bleached, by those exposed to tie direct rays of the sun, | the efforts he made to teach her how to skate, | lamb you couldn't but want to take her part,” | difference between gold and tinsel,” said, the : {Youre _ | plex. “His lazo is not externally a mere hard. | ang ¥, and full of burrsand feathers, it ie fs the best prophiuctic azainst sun stroke, and | having first modeled for the shoemaker a pair of | cried she, thrusting her needle into a bit of ona. happy bride, hopping up to her Imsband’s chair ipa another, you dumbfounded old _mul- ened villain, but a super-subtle Venetian, who | time toner it ua sorte caer rs who adopt this | little skates which were mismated to fit bric as savagely as if it had been an imaginary | one day and stroking his rugged eyebrows with Then they clinched and fought all eset works out his flendish plans with a dexterous | » vitable faced. Measure, washing th is and faces, as well | her unequal feet. How carefully he had guided | poniard, and the cloth the unfeeling breast of | her slender hand; but now-a-days I gust say, ‘y ght lightness of touch and smooti: sinuosity of move- | The boy doesn’t want it cut, of course. No one “s sto i a1 x lasses, ry asdrinkinz copiously of water every time they | her oyer the ice! Boa the precious red com- | Mr. Warner. Ephraim, a lump of the genuine ore looks good | $0"e, tipped over a gallon of mol _, one ment that suggest the transmigration of a ser- | “] Teserve paced h of it, will all | forter still, the she had called | _ Ephraim set his teeth together and whittled a | to me even if it is half buried in quartz.” wallowed around in the contents of pent into human fe And in his visage, and pina teary “ep palieseeneneaniouee me in reach of it, Ww! ji d ie barrel . ig) in, a ee , and | 3 hen perfect Immunity from sunstroke. Straw Dat | it, by which she had clung to hievan net Ged | antcete ine the shape of a tomahawk. It would | | ‘Thank you,” laughed Ephraim, “if you mean | #0Ur ba Magruder Was sitting on the foot with | #B0¥e all in his eye, burn the venom of his soul, part with enough hair to stuff a sofa pillow. Should be worn, ventilated at the top, and the | efforts to stand upright. have been a waste of breath to tell Aunt Blake | me!” his back against a potato sack. Deacon Sli- | Nhich makes his face at times look snake-like, | tev must be coerced, and kind words and broad erown of the hat filled with green leaves or wet | In those old times Persis liked him; he was | how he longed to rush to the rescue and save Transfer in the Tunnel, derback was doubled up in a bushel basket, | 9S W¢S*¥,—erroneously, however; for the eyes | THEY. sponge. It is better to wear thin flannel shirts, | Sure she did. He had sat in the kitchen while | his devoted Persis froth her “hard-wood” ad- 3 ofasnake do not burn and flash; on the con- | Promises are thrown away. Coercion is the only im order not to check perspiration, ‘We may ex. | he plodded at his Latin grammar--fe wae a nna | mirer. ae Pane Up toward the salt Codish hmansize | TAY, they have their hideous look because mE ing he about Pose ourselves for a tons time in the hot sun, | student always—and her bright face had Deen as a oenwe ectng Cn ee ee ee nt me entra: Even the rafter saa beth eens glaring savagely ce un cea Boothe hago ait enan | When Fag yp ales weg ge hapten and work or sleep ina bh Sood as an extra She had confided to him | Soul as big as a ninepence, ink I could bear 4 i vhile = a ve wi ago, altho | 4 perfect inmunit;, pool jg on = fier cntaee on wo Mee peli rerine it,” groaned he inwardly. ‘Oh, little Persis, | When he ventured to ask if the seat were en- | and puffing hard for wind, while James Bowers. ; and he had 2 much finer and more nearly consistent with it- -, was lying on the counter choking with é “ Our skin and clothing wet with water—ir ne, | from one is there nobody to save you? My poor deat | ghat he hurry and worry of business commo-| laughter. after having gathered aj the “en. | Self and with the facts of the trazedy than any ion thors” cards and scattered a genuine poker shakanres =a ‘ se = a and ugliness had raised no barrier betw Meanwhile the travel! 'y of four was a| Were, for the time being, entirely assuaged. not the azo that Shakespeare drew, and whose isouaeitec Gok usat oats Nit temon Ae; | them; ‘but latterly it eeerwed diferent. Persis | cheerful ‘one to all’ appearances and the tre . ee ee Hie gererianp gente anger brpakong bei | i “ - curving, : ; y is | May have to!” “If you won't aut my hair, Pi = ne tae tals cee he to set @ high value on weaith | to forget the terror that was to come. And narvelous fairness, he'd ne'er seen its bring in "nuff wood and coal to oe all winter, simplicity was gone from her character. | thought. And ‘twas greatly enhanced bya bit of court “talk.” “Come out he d make ready!” r milk. However, milkis better than anything, | Epiraim ne The time of trial drew near. Thus far Persis = only birds that “talk.” Birds not possessed of | eto divide men into classes, and hake mer ate H thing, | Ephirai ver saw her now m4 he yus far oe native power of melody are usually gifted with|to regard them individually as the em-|_, [never take any chances on a Crocuer Patcuworx.—Cut strips of calico, | €very miole-hill of a defect loomed up like a | how much her stout heart could . 3 bey to the chair. I fix him i - = say, | mountain. Persis had years at a boardii “Good nigit, dearest!” said Stanley as the: instal astonishii type of character. Iago is a crafty hypocrite; Tithe bate sale euanto eal widths. Sew |<chook forming her mind. and manner and | Parked at the (Oot of the stahase hekah ag [AE Mist, £8 was matural, they talked of the | row, for instance, can produce an astonishing neltner andor fot, put his talents only Inck cultivation to enable him | Us his hypocrisy and iis craft in such a manner | south to prevent « nelxt Gochetthem wita a short massive hook. It | quired elegance, he mourned for the old-time | steel, “Dream of me and the graceful little bride Passed, to give utterance to words; but his natural lan- | that they in combination are lago. The best { 2° to pr = 4 ~ forms a Mbt open-work. rather rough-looking | cordiality. It had got lost in the process of polish- | I shall claim one of these days.” Then spoke of the last showy wedding of fash- s wi + P ‘i hag | Hot in any sense be considered as a sot T{ embodied, and he ts nothing else. Now the | *ithacurry comb. If he ih on ton red LitiRe. OF inclowed es an gunted, on a col- | that she might see one day that he had not been | but no smile came with it. She shuddered and| HOW, énormous the fortune the groom had | Hot in any sense be considere say “Papa!” with | uth is that the embodiment of such @ simple ident to tine ook teen ored liffiné. of ‘incle ing between | laboring for naught; but his hope of winning | drew away. Something in her lover's tone hurt si i * buttons and articles previously tioned. it is se- | her fora wife was dying a slow, hard death. her. She had been half conscious of the same | The next thing in order, of course, was the tun-| fie invariably applied the name to ite proper | tlety was not in Shakespeare's mind, and is a | Ruyons and placed behind the chalt Yor thers Cured by’ sort of quilti ‘. ¥. Tribune. | While he was still stammering before her, try- thing before; but to-night, as if she had wakened nel Owner not the keodie’s Papa, but his master’s. | (uite impossible agent and element of the con- | 4 ‘Tux Vistves oF Borax fi ward C. Mann. her with all his heart. Then his awkwardness | lamb!” other that is known to the annals of the stage, is : < : von't do it!” “Won't you draw’ blood?” “I as a young lady was much admired. She | lovers, living on smiles and moonbeam: Oh, that chin with its dimple and wonderful set beiore the reader. The chief cause of the | WP Sugar, should be ready in every house where | had learned 5 f Ke “Tam doing it for Stanley;” this was the gir!’ es i : than oid tea, which is often given, or doubtful eae i ee ~_ pee sition sna T won't sak for light when I go to bod? Whea it is sweet and pure. wht of his ui inly hi had not faltered. The next day would pro’ His innocence thought was concealing a a ou ingainly hands and feet, and % : Prove ‘ very varied abilities of jon. A hooded | bodiment of some one passion, or motive, or old chair bolted to the floor, and and therefore the stage has sought to set before al the bite drmaly together. end to end, then | though Ephralin was fully alive to all the as- | thelr hotel. “Goodnight! Don'tdrean of eae | How ae sa how sultry the day that had | his talents one lack eit a ns, taroat, and ‘ia Tem agg og tng mage mc guage is the very reverse of melodious, and can- | !@go of the modern staze is hypocrisy and craft ' but very-trong: it can be uxed in this state as | ing. He was rising in the world; he thought | _ The old ready blush flickered on Persie’ cheek; gre kate great correctness, and what is more remarkable, | Combination of moral baseness and mental sub- | b€, found sufficient to rake out the saris, wo tl kfiesses of The washerwomen | 1 sppronclied, shrine ought, Stanley War- | to, it for the first time, it gave her a thrill of| With the darkness of Bgypt—whatever that | the starling talks very foushly Indeed to ius | fusion aud disaster of the tragedy.--awyust ie | tO atop into, ‘aud they ean be decorated ‘with fancy pictures and made to serve as parior orna- e aaaveubiciie her approached, sparkling with the exhilaration | pain. i. pat, feliows, but he is one of the best mimics we Re eee mel Whe hoe of Helned ond Belzinm. 0 proverbially clean | of iis dance. “Yersia Bel beet tore tes | Pee ani doing It forStanley,” thoughtshe, as her | AT4 the little black Ret eo MOSEL nave taltating the nited ebothe Bick Gl ; a eae ee noone ae and who get up their linen so beautifully white, | while she talked absently with Ephraims nna | head sought the pillow. its position from her chin to his. | even the human voice, with great accuracy. Shriukage and Swellage, use redned borax as washinz powder, instead of | now, as he smiled down upon her graciously,she | But the magie h soda, inthe proportion of one ad somehow gone of Lizzie B. W. 3 “ front, back, and side w: eho} out of the B, Walling. | Magpies also can be taught to atticulate with a | Detroit Free Press. | front, back, top and side without reference te borax powder to about ten Rana eee ' lines’ or angles. “The object is to remove hake ze handful of | looked up at him with a glow in her eyes which | Words. What if she were doing it for stenlecs tolerable dezree of accuracy. The mocking bird, | “I tell you, sab, dis partnership bizmess am |qhere ty wien, Tre object is to pond F me “AM of the | turned an Weng, ewer could not bear, He | Was that going to take away the terror and the| When You Can Strip the Bark froma Tree. | fon" 's0 wall Lisson tere pe aang bi Powful resky,” said the old man as he nibbled a | when the shears find epee eee phe pete water: they save in soap near alf. All ofthe | turned on’his heel and walked a) grinding | agony? Was there length and breadth and depth| 4 notion prevails among tree men that if on | States, has no natural melody of his own, but . u ; en onion at the Central Market. “‘Las'month | tocutit. Theboy wouldn't know how it got there large washiez establishments adopt the same | some resentful thought under the sey’ Cr enough in his love to atone for all this? oe bark | he contrives to ost faithful maton | plan. For laces, eambrics and lawns an extra | boot. a ors WA | oul he let het walter 0?” Ab, thers aris | the longest day of the year, June 21, the he song of nearly all his, feather nbors. I went into partnership wid Cwsar White in de | if youasked him. He has had his head in closets, ‘ | 3 is entirely peeled off no i will be | the songs of nearly ail his feathered neighbors. t bi He fi de ter an’ I | Cellars, garrets, barns, po ity of thie powder is used. and for crino- | Persis scarcely noted that he went. Some | sting! Not that he had persuaded or even ad. | °C ® tree : : peanut bizness. He furnished de roast fence corners, ines requiring to be made stiff wstrong solution | time hence, when of experience should | vised her; but then he certainly had not done fo the tree, but that u new bark wi mme- ened ee only cases Werskaiown fs necessai 8, barreis, Curious! pry an boxes, and all sorts of nooks, and such extra att . 1 of talkin naries I ™ ch tof uzht de peanuts, au’ we was to whack up on is of @ Borax being « neutral salt does | soften her harsh Judgments, she would learn to | the undertaking. He had let her see clearly that | diately are ayer Bn ot ra — profits. Dat Caesar am a bad man, an’ doan’ you | tachments are no surprise to him. - i central counties of the state, having on his | Exgland, but I am not able to draw any conclu- | reir it. if 1 hadn't bin on de wateh fur him No one should be iess than half an hour rob- : not in the #lizhtest dezree injure the texture of | appreciate a lump of genuine even though | he should be gratided if she had the fortitade to | the central counties of the, sta Sule tagh whieh from that circumstance. It may be | f°! eit es vat en captilary. substance the liven. Its effect is to soften the hardest | half buried in quartz; hot yet . bear it, And why? then he could Re lind intended cut do My pot nee anes may. possibly al Lee ee he tried ter pla : a sa rd ‘atten ee wg i's Laat sag, 3S ita plecant dance, itr. Warner?” said claim, “graceful pride” | Not 8. “wounded ¢ the experiment, although he had littie faith they | certain family of canaries settled in the west Pio coke could gusen apd nicking the reet-of | Ovedouking = - ie, ‘ing wi he delicate fan she had just | dove.’ a womtin who red in her gai 1080 ift it is to imitate, Cases ror Ksirrixe DLES.—Cut from | Tees en ee ie Ciamayclon of He Sane but one who walked among other pane the tree would live. Accordi country, whose peculiar git nal his onion, the old man continued: eloth or vyeivet three pieces about eighteen | “-tadifferently 40, Miss Persia. With another | thelr June he stripped the bark entirely of “Well, sah, when we come to roas’ dem pea- a - “ leaves of the nuts dat Ciesar wanted me to believe dat de inches long and two inches wide. shape theends | lady I might mention as partner it would have | _ And this was the way hefloved her! The man the = © to a point. bind these all round with ribbon to | been impossible to say how charming.” for whom she had already to sacrifice 60 much! ene, St shrinkage , and sew them up from the bottom of the | _ Persis blushed, agreeably to a carey Mr. | Persis could not sleep. ¢ side is straight. Fasten a lit- | Warner like to play with those blushes; it was “ Her soul up too much light steel ring just inside each point at | delightful to call them up at his ; such ‘Under her eyes for the night.” the top. so 2+ to project a little beyond it, and | bricht, shy things that even the odious crutch | Next mosning she knocked betimes at her r acord to match. A | was forgotten, or glorified. in their rosy light. | mother’s door. “And you went to law?” “No, sah! T got an jnspirashan “bout-dat time, Blin hort sentence an’ I poured de whole into a barrel stg could be made for | “So, in spite of my neglect, you were not left What fs it, my iter 2” pra Siedler water. Ask for the little rings at a | to play the wall-flower.” continued he, taking a When does the early train leave, mamma? I] A Sraxrercant movement is going on in Eng- women fancy or hardware shop. A pretty case | seat beside her and boldly possessing himself of | think I will go home.” land to promotethe-emigration of yor for Stocl knitting nedies ‘could be made of | her little hand. ee | i Why, Boag is the day—” whose chances for happy and useful lives at imson felt, which will keep the needles bright; ©, not a wall-flower,” repeated she, timidly, “On which I have come to my senses.” home are small. The excess of the female popu- it is drm and strong and very nice to work. half withdrawing her hand, half yielding it “What do you mean, child I wish I could p of decennial Cut a piece eighteen inches long, ten inches , his clasp. s hope you had given up this mad scheme; but I is ‘pro- Wide; turn over a piece at the left hand five and| “It seems to me, Persis, that young lawyer | suppose that is past praying for.” noticed ap a @half inches: this makes the part in the case | hovers about you very Ligaen ae “No, mamma, I have given it and that is ‘The Echo night a were for the four slivisions for the needles. At the | _ There was the slightest touch of pique in Mr. | not all’ nor half’ I give up also ‘such looting, ream Hight hand fold over a piece of four inches; this | Waraer's tone, and It thrilled the simple heart | who is willing to let me suffer.” r women to totes forms a flap to go ever the ends ofthe needies. | of Persis. Mrs. Talbot Make these two parts of six and three-quarter | “He isa worthy mamma says, wide, cating out the upper ‘conan The | and I must like iim.” replied with a reas- Middle part, whieh makes the nap to go over | suring smile. “He does not smoke cigars, like hen the case is folded, is rounded at the | the beasts that perish,” added she in her quaint @omers.§ The case is first worked all round with | we! Battomhole stitch, done with crimson knitting |" Mr. Warner offered a correction. “Man is the . mik to match the feit, then work the rope stiteh | only animal that smokes,” sald he, with a wise | think it was not so. A cone ier _ ——- ; stitch. | sinile: for he never eens ms a shen she be like that. He must visions for the : 2 vantage Seather stitch. Sew the sides together withiane | of Be ee é ak, Chack aiyons duwn the feather | “He is a tyemendons worker, that Zelle; began itch to the bac 2 | at th foot ‘a the ladder, and is steadily climb- | had 14, 15, 16, 17, with gold | presubves upin your Gly ehiid Snieeestih, Tears right-hand a sinati | Sometimes feared in 5 z g fe 3 Es caf ile E louse Pp sew large eye will do, and to this a | “Oi, Stanley!” copes crimson silk braid. When | The frank, gwiteless eyes which in = in half it ts 334 inches wide; it | in honest surprise at the ugspoken a knittin-necdes—| uttucinent for another, how could ie. siake tuelrmeaning? He did